MARK
HULBERT
Published:
May 13, 2015 5:01 a.m. ET
Market
Watch
CHAPEL
HILL. N.C. (MarketWatch) — Investors are needlessly worrying about the prospect
of Greece
defaulting on its debt and withdrawing from the eurozone.
Consider:
If a Greek exit from the euro a “Grexit,” as this possibility is being called —
were really a cause for worry, then why aren’t the recent British elections
causing a huge panic? After all, the Tory Party’s resounding victory, along
with its anti-European Union stance, is leading some to speculate that the U.K.
could leave the European Union as soon as next year — a so-called Brexit.
And the U.K. economy is far larger than Greece ’s: In fact, the U.K. economy is
the second largest in the European Union, representing 16% of the total GDP of
the all member countries. Greece ’s
GDP, in contrast, represents just 1.3%.
Far from
plunging, however, European stocks appear to be shrugging off the U.K. election
results.
Either
investors are in denial about the investment significance of a Brexit, or
they’re exaggerating the significance of a Grexit.
My analysis
of stock market history inclines me to the latter explanation. Sovereign debt
crises like the one Greece
has been suffering from in recent years are not particularly rare, and more
often than not following past such crises, the stock market rose.
And not by
a little bit, either. Consider the stock market’s performance following the
four such crises prior to Greece ’s.
These four were:
The 1994
Mexican peso devaluation and associated crisis
The Thai
government debt crisis in 1997, which led to the phrase “Asian contagion”
The 1998
Russian ruble devaluation in August 1998, which — among other things — led to
the bankruptcy of Long Term Capital Management
The 2001
Argentinian government debt/currency crisis
The chart
at the top of this column shows how the U.S. stock market on average
reacted to these four crises. The chart also plots how the stock market has
performed since the Greek debt crisis first erupted 5+ years ago — in November
2009. For both data series, 100 represents the stock market’s level when those
crises first broke onto the world financial scene.
Notice the
broad similarity of the two data series. Far from being out of character, in
other words, the stock market’s reaction to the Greek crisis has been
remarkably similar to how it reacted on other similar occasions.
Note
carefully that I didn’t cherry pick my four crises after the fact in order to
come up with a sample that matches the market’s behavior over the past
five-plus years. I first created this sample in March 2010, when the European
debt crisis was just over three months old. That’s when I reported that stock
markets typically take sovereign debt crises “in stride.”
The
explanation for this otherwise surprising reaction to terrible news has to do
with the massive fiscal and/or monetary stimulus that is the nearly universal
government response to such crises. Regardless of the long-term wisdom of such
stimulus, few dispute that much of that stimulus finds its way into the stock
market.
In arguing
that investors are making too big a deal about Greece’s travails, I’m not
saying that there aren’t plenty of others things to be concerned about — many
of which I have discussed in recent columns.
But if you
have been staying out of the stock market solely because of concerns about a
Grexit, you might want to reconsider.
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/why-stock-investors-shouldnt-worry-if-greece-exits-eurozone-2015-05-13
No comments:
Post a Comment